New Zealand kubana zaidi Sheria kudhibiti mashambulizi ya kigaidi

New Zealand kubana zaidi Sheria kudhibiti mashambulizi ya kigaidi

beth

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Waziri Mkuu, Jacinda Ardern amelitaka Bunge kupitisha Sheria itakayofanya kupanga mashambulizi ya kigaidi kuwa kosa

Hatua hiyo inakuja baada ya Mtu mmoja Raia wa Sri Lanka kushambulia kwa kisu watu saba kabla ya kuuawa na Polisi kwa risasi Septemba 03, 2021. Waziri Mkuu amesema watu watatu kati ya walioshambuliwa wana hali mbaya

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New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern called on Saturday for parliament to pass a law by the end of the month making it illegal to plan terror attacks. The move comes after a man inspired by "Islamic State" ideology stabbed seven people in an Auckland shopping mall before being shot dead by police.

Ardern said three of the victims are in critical condition after the attack on Friday committed by a lone Sri Lankan national.

What happened?

The 32-year-old man, who police said was under constant observation, walked into the Countdown Supermarket in LynnMall, Auckland, at 2:30 p.m. on Friday.

"Inside the store, we believe this man took a knife from one of the supermarket shelves and attacked shoppers," the New Zealand police said in a statement.

Undercover police officers that had been tracking the man were on the scene within 60 seconds, said the statement.

Members of the Specialist Tactics Group "challenged the man and diverted his attention. He charged at them with the knife and the officers shot him. He died at the scene shortly afterwards," said the police spokesperson.

The IS-inspired man critically injured three people, seriously wounded one more and hurt two others.

Why was the man not in jail?

New Zealand anti-terrorist police said they had had the attacker, identified only as "S," under surveillance since 2016 when he posted "anti-Western and violent" material on social media. He had first arrived in New Zealand in 2011.

Prosecutors had previously tried to prosecute him under the Terrorism Suppression Act, but a High Court judge ruled that preparing an attack was not an offense in the country at the time.

Anti-terror police had tracked him constantly after he left prison in July for having extremist material that spoke of martyrdom.

Ardern wants to pass a law allowing people who plan terrorism to be tried in court.

"We will complete that work," she said. "That means we can pass that law as soon as possible and no later than by the end of this month," she promised.

Source: DW
 
Kwanza mungerekebisha sheria zenu zinazoudhi na uonevu mpaka watu hasira zinapanda na kuamua liwalo na liwe
 
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